Some Favorite Places:

Old Mail Road Trail

Old Mail Road Trail follows the path taken by the postmen before the road was put in on the northern peninsula. The men who set the trail would have been looking for the easiest way to get from one community to another during the winter months in particular. These trails were also used by the nurses who provided care in these isolated areas.

To reach the trail head follow Main Street in Cow Head to the north, it becomes Parks Road. Follow this paved road to the end of the pavement. At the Y in the road, turn left towards the Shallow Bay Beach and Picnic Area. The road to the right takes you to the Shallow Bay Campground. At the end of this road you’ll find a large parking lot. From here you can go straight out to the beach. If you stand in the parking lot facing the beach you will see the trail head to your right. The trail leads into the trees.

The Sign Reads:

“This trail once ran the length of the Great Northern Peninsula. It was the only land connection between communities. With dog teams or horses, winter mail couriers travelled this route from 1882 to 1952. They waded through freezing water, crossed thin ice, and battled storms, taking shelter in homes along the way. Starting in 1906, Tom Knott, and later his son Jim, carried the mail from Woody Point to Parsons Pond. The building of the highway in the 1950s ended this heroic area.”

The first part of the trail takes you to the Shallow Bay Campground. It is government run and a lovely campground. At this point you have 2 options. The first is to continue going north and the trail comes out to meet Park Road. The second choice is to turn west and head to the beach. Signs on the boardwalk provide information on the flora and fauna of this unique area. This area is one of the very few sand beaches in Newfoundland.

The Sign Reads:

“Sand beaches and dunes are rare in Newfoundland. This sand was ground from the Long Range Mountains by glaciers. Marram grass holds the dunes together as a living community of plants and animals. The leaves and stems slow the wind so that sand grains drop rather than blowing inland. As sand accumulates, the grass grows, trapping more sand. Marram grass can survive heat, cold, salt, and sand-blasting, but dies if trampled. Please do not walk on the dunes.”

If you head south along the beach you will eventually come to another boardwalk which leads back to the parking lot.

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